
Earlier Thursday, the United Nations said the official toll of 450 dead was expected to rise."It is quite likely that the numbers will continue to go up since the destruction of the houses in this area is quite total," said U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Margareta Wahlstrom.The San Clemente church in the main plaza of the gritty fishing port of Pisco was perhaps the single deadliest spot in the magnitude-8 earthquake, which devastated cities and hamlets of adobe and brick across Peru's southern desert.Hundreds had gathered in the pews of the San Clemente church Wednesday-the day Roman Catholics celebrate the Virgin Mary's rise into heaven-for a special mass marking one month since the death of a Pisco man.The church ceiling began to break apart as the shaking began and lasted for an agonizing two minutes,burying 200 people, according to the town's mayor.On Thursday,only two stone columns and the church's dome rose from a giant pile of stone,bricks,wood and dust.Rescuers pulled out bodies all day and lined them up on the plaza-at least 60 by late afternoon.Civil defense workers then arrived and zipped them into body bags.But relatives searching desperately for the missing opened the zippers, crying hysterically each time they recognized a familiar face.Few in the traumatized crowds would talk with journalists. One man shouted at the bodies of his wife and two small daughters as they were pulled from the rubble:"Why did you go? Why?""The dead are scattered by the dozens on the streets,"Pisco Mayor Juan Mendoza told Lima radio station CPN, sobbing."We don't have lights,water,communications.Most houses have fallen.Churches,stores,hotels everything is destroyed."Rescue worker Jose Nez, who went into the church wreckage dozens of times, said rescuers would keep it up "until the end,"as a mechanical shovel cleared awaychunks of adobe.As dusk fell, Health Minister Carlos Vallejos said finding survivors seems increasingly unlikely."We keep losing hope of finding someone alive after 24 hours have passed" since the quake struck, Vallejos told The Associated Press outside of the church.But around 6:30 p.m., almost 24 hours since the quake struck, a man who identified himself only as "Alfredo" was pulled from the rubble by six firemen.Some 17 people died inside a church in Ica, the Canal N cable news station said.The historic Senor de Luren church was among several heavily damaged in Ica,where at least 57 bodies were taken to the morgue...
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